2 research outputs found
Unraveling the Biophysical Mechanisms of How Antiviral Detergents Disrupt Supported Lipid Membranes: Toward Replacing Triton X‑100
Triton X-100 (TX-100) is a membrane-disrupting detergent
that is
widely used to inactivate membrane-enveloped viral pathogens, yet
is being phased out due to environmental safety concerns. Intense
efforts are underway to discover regulatory acceptable detergents
to replace TX-100, but there is scarce mechanistic understanding about
how these other detergents disrupt phospholipid membranes and hence
which ones are suitable to replace TX-100 from a biophysical interaction
perspective. Herein, using the quartz crystal microbalance-dissipation
(QCM-D) and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) techniques
in combination with supported lipid membrane platforms, we characterized
the membrane-disruptive properties of a panel of TX-100 replacement
candidates with varying antiviral activities and identified two distinct
classes of membrane-interacting detergents with different critical
micelle concentration (CMC) dependencies and biophysical mechanisms.
While all tested detergents formed micelles, only a subset of the
detergents caused CMC-dependent membrane solubilization similarly
to that of TX-100, whereas other detergents adsorbed irreversibly
to lipid membrane interfaces in a CMC-independent manner. We compared
these biophysical results to virus inactivation data, which led us
to identify that certain membrane-interaction profiles contribute
to greater antiviral activity and such insights can help with the
discovery and validation of antiviral detergents to replace TX-100
Nanomolar Protein Thermal Profiling with Modified Cyanine Dyes
Protein properties
and interactions have been widely investigated
by using external labels. However, the micromolar sensitivity of the
current dyes limits their applicability due to the high material consumption
and assay cost. In response to this challenge, we synthesized a series
of cyanine5 (Cy5) dye-based quencher molecules to develop an external
dye technique to probe proteins at the nanomolar protein level in
a high-throughput one-step assay format. Several families of Cy5 dye-based
quenchers with ring and/or side-chain modifications were designed
and synthesized by introducing organic small molecules or peptides.
Our results showed that steric hindrance and electrostatic interactions
are more important than hydrophobicity in the interaction between
the luminescent negatively charged europium-chelate-labeled peptide
(Eu-probe) and the quencher molecules. The presence of substituents
on the quencher indolenine rings reduces their quenching property,
whereas the increased positive charge on the indolenine side chain
improved the interaction between the quenchers and the luminescent
compound. The designed quencher structures entirely altered the dynamics
of the Eu-probe (protein-probe) for studying protein stability and
interactions, as we were able to reduce the quencher concentration
100-fold. Moreover, the new quencher molecules allowed us to conduct
the experiments using neutral buffer conditions, known as the peptide-probe
assay. These improvements enabled us to apply the method in a one-step
format for nanomolar protein–ligand interaction and protein
profiling studies instead of the previously developed two-step protocol.
These improvements provide a faster and simpler method with lower
material consumption
